HOOK
Teams do not rebuild trust because leaders demand accountability.
They rebuild trust because leaders model it first.
ENHANCEMENT
When leaders: own mistakes openly communicate honestly correct problems fairly and stay consistent under pressure
people begin stepping forward again instead of protecting themselves.
That is how accountability cultures recover after trust has been damaged.
REFLECTION
I can remember many times throughout my journey as a leader wondering why I seemed to be surrounded by people who could not grasp important concepts or perform at the level I expected.
Eventually I realized there was one unifying factor in all of those situations:
Me.
Rather than pointing my finger outward, I needed to accept accountability for failures and change my approach instead of shifting blame onto the people around me.
That realization changed my leadership.
It is natural to look outward first for a scapegoat.
None of us enjoys admitting we may have played a major role in failed outcomes.
But that mindset creates a culture of fear and distrust.
And perhaps more importantly, it robs us of the opportunity to grow through introspection and reflection.
Maybe we were not clear in our communication.
Maybe we failed to train the team adequately.
Maybe the strategy was too complicated.
Maybe we delegated responsibility without truly equipping people for success.
As leaders, we play a role in everything that happens within our teams.
In the military, I was taught that a leader is responsible for everything the team does or fails to do.
Does that mean team members never make mistakes?
Of course not.
People absolutely need to be accountable for their performance.
But leadership accountability requires us to look further back in the sequence and ask: What could I have done differently? What did I fail to reinforce? Where did I fail to develop, clarify, support, or lead?
That perspective changes everything.
Because accountability is rebuilt when leaders stop creating environments where people fear blame and start creating environments where people can grow, improve, and step forward confidently.
That is how trust is rebuilt.
That is how ownership returns.
And that is how leaders become the kind of leaders people actually want to follow.
Before looking to place blame today, first ask yourself:
What could I have done differently that may have changed the outcome?
That question gives you something powerful:
Control.
And it models the exact accountability you want your team to demonstrate.
CLOSING QUESTION
Before placing blame today, what could you have done differently that may have changed the outcome?

